President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued an Executive Order that gave the U.S. army authority to compel 120,000 Japanese ...
The Wannsee Conference was held on January 20, 1942, near Berlin, Germany. Fifteen high-level German officials from various ...
Japanese Americans held in prison camps were allowed to return home. But much of what they'd left behind was gone: homes, ...
The Japan Fair Trade Commission (JFTC) announced on January 29 that it has launched an investigation into unfair trade practices in the domestic anime and film industries. The agency will investigate ...
The fact is that children are losing the war against child exploitation, and the casualties against innocence lie squarely on the conscience of the tech industry. That’s why it is up to everyday ...
The exploitation of natural resources does not seem to be slowing down, and now, the new target appears to be the carbon market. Over the past decade, the environment has become a key pillar of ...
The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has stated that war, poverty, and over-exploitation of trees have led to widespread destruction of pistachio forests in Afghanistan. In a statement released ...
In my Moruya years the Moruya Examiner Newspaper recounted an oral history that revealed that a Japanese landing party in 1942 silently slipped onto Australian ... Winston Churchill who said that in ...
the remains of 136 people from the Korean Peninsula and 47 Japanese nationals still lie in the flooded Chosei coal mine in Ube, Yamaguchi Prefecture. On Feb. 3, 1942, which was during World War II ...
the remains of 136 people from the Korean Peninsula and 47 Japanese nationals still lie in the flooded Chosei coal mine in Ube. On Feb. 3, 1942, during World War II, the flooding accident occurred ...
Most were witnesses. Nazi racism demanded the forced sterilization of Germans of African descent, the murder of Germans with disabilities and Soviet prisoners of war, and the enslavement of Slavs.
Descendants of survivors helped researchers identify 279 deportees and tell their stories. ‘We give previously faceless victims a voice,’ says project’s co-founder.